Anonymous ID: 12b3aa June 20, 2018, 11:46 a.m. No.1832417   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2524

>>1832332

Q !UW.yye1fxo ID: 3c553f No.567521

Mar 6 2018 11:06:22 (EST)

1st BOOM revealed.

Did you catch it?

The last will be magical.

Q

 

Mentioned below:

Stone

Magical

Flower

Star

Flooding

 

SOLSTICE TRADITIONS

Every year on the summer solstice, thousands of people travel to Wiltshire, England to Stonehenge—a mysterious prehistoric monument. See more about this ancient site.

 

In Sweden, people traditionally celebrate the beginning of summer (Midsommar) by eating the first strawberries of the season, lighting bonfires, and dancing around the maypole (midsommarstång). Learn more about Midsummer’s Day.

 

There are many northern people like the Swedes who celebrate Midsummer’s Day and eve. After all, these northern people have merged from some long, dark winters! In Tyrol, Austria, torches and bonfires are lit up on mountainsides.

 

According to ancient Latvian legend, Midsummer Even (St. John’s Eve) on June 23 is spent awake by the glow of a bonfire and in pursuit of a magical fern flower—said to bring good luck—before cleansing one’s face in the morning dew. Read more about fern folklore.

 

In ancient Egypt, summer was the start of the new year. The rising of the star Sirius roughly coincided with the summer solstice and the annual flooding of the Nile River.